Just Published, 
THE FIRST FOUR. PARTS 
OF 
A NEW AND IMPROVED EDITION 
OF 
LIZARS’ ANATOMTCAL PLATES, 
PLAIN AND COLOURED, DEMY FOLIO, 
WITH LETTERPRESS THE SIZE OF THE PLATES, 
BY 
JOHN LIZARS, F.R.S.E., 
PROFEsSOR OF SURGERY TO THE ROYAL COLLEGE OF SURGEONS. 
PROSPECTUS. 
I. The work will be completed in Twelve Monthly Parts, price 
7s 6d. plain, and 10s. 6d. coloured. 
II. The Letterpress, from a new type, printed in the most ele- 
gant style, and on the best paper, will be folio, in double columns, 
the size of the Plates which it will accompany, and great care will 
be taken to remedy any errors or mistakes in the first editions, 
III. All the Plates will be altered and improved, and new and 
additional Plates given where requisite. 
1V. The Plates will be both coloured and plain, and the great 
improvements lately achieved in printing, engraving, colouring, and 
papermaking, enable the Publisher to promise all these advantages 
in this New Edition, at about half the price formerly obtained for 
this splendid and useful Work. 
V. From the Plates being all engraved, the greatest regularity 
may be depended upon in the appearance of the Work monthly, till 
completed. 
Note.— Although it is usual, in works published in numbers, to 
delay giving the Contents and Index till the end; yet that each 
Part may appear in as useful and complete a state as possible, 
these will be given along with the numbers, and paged separately by 
themselves ; so that, when the volume is completed, they can be placed 
either at the beginning or end, as deemed most advisable. 
“ This work is about to be republished, under a new, handsome, and con- 
venient form. It will extend to 12 Parts, with this recommendation, which 
delays in the publication of many recent works that have been issued in 
parts renders as rare as it is desirable, that ‘the plates being all ready en- 
graved, the greatest regularity can be ensured in the appearance of the work, 
monthly, until completed.” When the work was first issued we were enabled 
to say, that the Plates were ‘ the best of the kind that we had ever seen,’ and 
they still preserve their claims, if not now unrivalled, on the attention of 
students of anatomy.”’— Lancet, August 1839. 
